THE HOOD KIVER NEWS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1913 7 mm After the Doctor THE DRUGGIST The doctor's work is only half what has to be done, for the pa tient. And if the druggist be lacking in ability and care the prescription might as well have never been written. But we make a special study of each case and our own medical knowledge is thorough enough to be of great use to us in those sometimes oc curring cases when the doctor, in his haste, makes a slight'error. CIIAS. N. Rco the fifth R. E. OLD'S CROWNING SUCCESS Place your order for one with D. McDonald HOOD RIVER, ORlXiON Hgcnt for fiudoon and Rco Cars Hcvo groceries for We especiaffy invite tfi ladies to caff and inspect our fine fine of I?fass and Canned oods "Uhe Hcst Things to Eat" W2d's Grocery J. M. WOOD, Proprietor PHONIi 7 4th & State St. Phone 248K 0. P. DABNEY & SONS j FURNITURE, FURNITURE, FURNITURE, STOVES ! X AND RANGES We buy, sell and exchange everything In House furnishings, Campers Supplies, etc. Don't forget the place-Cor. 4th & State t X t I J. M. SCHMELTZER HOOD RIVER ABSTRACT COMPANY ABSTRACTS t Insurance Surety "Accuracy" f Office In New Heilbronner llulldlnn X m . r coiumvia auio a Flat Hates gitJcn on general Overhauling and Tainting of lutomobiles efirst Class IKacft ine Sftcp in Connection Phone 109 : Sixth and Columbia 5ts. 8 B C3 CLARKE X X t FREE DELIVERY F. A. BISHOPf Conveyancing! Bonds is Our Motto Phone 23 Hood River, Oregon Riacnine lompany rjk J SAYS PROGRESSIVES WIN IN HOOD RIVER (Randall R. Howard In current "Coun try Gentleman") "You'll And a few non progressive! In every community," said Professor VV. H. Lawrence, fruit inspector of Hood Klver county, Oregon, to little group of apple enthusiasts In the hotel lobby. "That's what they are, all right people who won't spray and prune their apple trees. They're non-progressives." And his eyes flashed, and there was a snap of fighting vim in the voice of the vigorous young hortl cultural expert. "But I go right on working don't pay any attention to them. The people who kick when the neglected trees are cut down are prac tically all non-residents who don't un. derstand the Hood River Valley spirit who don't appreciate the price that must be paid for apple perfection." The fruit Inspector was telling about the county campaign for maintaining the world-wide reputation that the lit tle Hood River Valley has gained as a producer of almost perfect apples. But I did not need to listen long before deciding it was more than a campaign It was war uncompromising war against apple pests, apple Ignorance, apple dishonesty. The county fruit in spector, the "apple doctor," is one of the two salaried and highly trained field generals leading and working with the 5000 apple growing residents of Hood River county in their co oper, ative struggle for apple profits. The other trained field general Is Wilmer Sieg, business manager of the Hood River Apple Growers' Union. "I am working at present to elimi nate the San Jose scale," continued Fruit Inspector Lawrence." I know the location of practically every diseased tree in the valley. About forty differ ent orchardists are co-operating with me, every one of whom would sacri fice several hundred dollars in present apple profits rather than to risk the reputation of Hood River apples in the least." His statement had nothing of boast ing in it, for Professor Lawrence Is a quiet-mannered man, still In his thir ties. He is a fluent and a willing talk er, because he knows his subject and is almost boyishly enthusiastic. His mildness at times turns to militant aggresiveness because he knows that he knows his subject, and has apple ideals. His time Is so much in de mand in the Hood River Valley that he is a hard man to catch unless you happen to be an apple grower. I found him in the evening in the lobby of one of the valley metropolis hotels, surrounded by a group of apple enthus iasts three young professors from the Oregon Agricultural College, doing col lege extension work and conducting scientific apple experiments In the val ley, and a youthful graduate from the University of Wisconsin, who was mak ing a tour of the best-known orchard districts of th' United States, trying to decide wheher he should jump Into the apple producing game In the West or in the East. Professor Lawrence jumped into Hood River Valley orchard research work with a vim, giving up bis classes and hig experiments at the Washing ton State Agricultural College at Pull man. One of the first big problems that he tackled was to rid the valley of fire blight, a fruit pest bo general and so dreaded in the United States today that many state agricultural ex periment stations have advised against the planting of any additional pear trees. Fruit inspector Lawrence found traces of fire blight over approximate ly 3000 acrs in the Hood River Valley. But he began to slash "Trees and limbs, and under his direction and order an almost Infinite number of "surgical op erations" were performed, this being the only effective remedy against the tree disease. As a result, today fire blight has been entirely wiped out In th Hood River Valley, not a single case having been reported during the past season. A second vigorous battle against tree diseases In the Hood River Valley Is now undor way the elimination of the San Jose scale. One of the first steps In the campaign w as to enlist ev ery horticultural plant In the town of Hood River, located on the Columbia River at the gateway to the valley. There has been no trifling, though some few residents of the county me. tropolla and non-resident property owners were Inclined to squirm and to assert their Individualism. "Clean up your trees or cut them down," Is the order, and the squeamish owners know that a flood of public approval Is behind the order. But these two big battles In the war agnlnst apple pests have only prepared the way In the Hood River Valley for a third and a still morn crucial one. "There's no doubt," said Professor Lawrence, "that the biggest apple pro blem In the Northwest today Is dry rot." "What's the cause of dry rot," you ask, the county horticulturist replied. 'Well, I don't care to make any state mentsJust yet. I have been experi menting, and I have proved certain things. But I haven' yet assembled all of my facts." Frankness a Local Virtus It may be Interesting to state right here that not every apple district of the Northwest is as honest and frank with itself as is Hood River as regards things. But I haven't yet assembled all dry rot. But many other sections proves the old saying that "none is so blind as he who will not see." The others have seemingly never found caBes of dry rot though such cases are known to exist there by the score and cases of dry rot have existed for as long as ten years past in the Wll lamette Valley, Western Oregon. I talked with several horticultural ex perts who attended the recent "Nation al Apple Show" at Spokane, where ap pie growers gathered with their ex- hibits from practically every fruit dis trict in the Northwest "Those fellows all side-stepped the question of dry rot," one of my inform, ants sand. "They were all good boost ers, they were." More Problems Ahead The Hood River county fruit Inspec tor is at work on a unique list of prob lems. "We have backed the non-irrigating apple-growers off the map," he explained, "but we don't yet know the exact amount of water needed for our different soils. We have proved that certain chemicals Injected Into the ground will prevent the spread of cer. tain tree diseases, but these experi ments are far from complete. The mat ter of precooling and cold-storage for apples-its exact worth and methods of procedure-is yet in the experimental stage. The difference In keeping qual ities of apples from trees of diftcren'. ages has never been worked out any where in the United States yet we continue to pick and pack apples pro miscuously, as if they were all exactly Alike. And we don't know very much about the actions of different kinds of sprays, about cover crops, fertilizers, and so on and on and on. "In fact I could keep eleven assist ants busy on the experiments that I have started and that ought to be worked through immediately," the county fruit inspector concluded. However, not all of Professor Law rence's problems are problems of Na ture. Some of them are problems of human nature. For instance, soon af ter he came to direct the scientific and co-operative warfare that is meant to maintain the present pre-eminent quality of Hood River apples, he as sembled arguments and petitioned the Department of Agriculture for a soil survey of the valley. "They turned me down," Btated the professor. "But the next day a large number of letters, each from a differ ent Hood River orchardist, started to ward Washington, D. C, all petition. lng for a soil survey. Co-operation the Golden Word Intelligent co-operation is the gold en word. Some call It the "Hood Riv er spirit'" which may be amplified In the words of a young orchardist: "Most of us in the valley think and talk apple most of the time." He continued: "I don't think we ought to allow ourselves to get so narrow that we can't talk intelligently about other subjects besides apples when we have to. Now there are a good many people in the valley who just naturally have to close up, who have n't a single word to say when the topic of conversation wanders away from apples. That's going too far, 1 think even though I read the other day, in the autobiography of a rail road president, that he ascribed his success to eternally thinking and talk ing shop." Apple Chautauqua Described Then the or hardist described the work of the various "improvement clubs" of different sectiins of the val ley, with their regular monthly meet ings, usually addressed by some per son of authority, often invited to come form the distant State Agricultural College. He told about the activities of the Hood River Valley University Club, with some 130 nu mbers, repre senting nearly every college of the United States. He told of the Valley Summer Chautauqua Assoinbly, attend ed last year by several hundred per. sons. "What is the purpose of the Chau tauqua?" I inquired. "Just entertainment just a good time," answered the apple grower. "We have people here in the val ley from all over the country former amatur and professionul actors, and the former manager of a vaudeville circuit. So we had shows ;md speeches. Of course we devoted some time to ap ples all of the afternoon sessions in fact. And a good many, in fact most of the other addresses, too, were on topics that In some wny related to our work of apple growing. It was called the Horticultural Chautauqua, you know. Everybody agreed that it was a big success uud it will be held every year now." But the production of apples In this day of the West is considerably less than half of the orchard game. If pro ducing w ?re all the growers would not be so anxiously concerned now about the Immediate future of the apple In dustry. The Hood River County fruit Inspector Is watching the gates to pre vent apple disease from getting In or getting out. He Is stamping out the diseases already in and training the individual orchardists to be their own apple doctors. But the apples must be packed, shipped and sold. And because of this the story of co-operation in the Hood River Apple Growers' ' Union. "The Union" as It is affectionately called by its loyal members and respectfully referred to by its several active and sometimes bitter competitors, is as well known In Its way as the Hood River apple. "The Union" Is the business end of the commercial Hood River apples or at least of a percentage. Hence it was the natural thing for me to find the Union manager, WUmer Sleg, in an atmosphere of typewriters, adding machines and letter files, in his private room at Union headquarters, seated at a desk piled high with letters and telegrams. He is a type of the successful Amerclan business man, ag gressive yet approachable, a man in the prime of middle age who has served for 24 years as a commission merchant in a large city, and who Is the only man ever electd twice to the presidency of the National League of Commission Merchants. "The different apple growing dis tricts of the Northwest must organize and co-operate, just as we are doing here locally," said Mr. Sieg, In speak ing of the future of the apple In gen eral. "And the apple must be cheap ened to the consumer and its use stim ulatd by a national campaign of adver tising. "No, I don't believe that co-operative selling will tend to lower our ap ple standards, through averaging and leveling the quality and the price. Rather I believe that co-operative sell ing will intensify the individuality of each separate district, since practical ly every apple district in the North west specializes in different varieties. Here at Hood River we take nearly all the prizes for Spltzenbergs and Yel low Newtowns, while other districts specialize in Wlnesaps, Baldwins, Jon: athans, etc. Each section and each apple has its own particular merit, which could be macj known by indi vidual advertising campaigns. We know, for instance, that one class of trade wants a fancy, high-priced apple, while another class wants a cheap ap ple. Here at Hood River, of course, we have been specializing in fancy apples. Our trade-mark stands for quality." The last remark caused me to re member what one of the New Y'ork apple commission houses has said about Hood River apples and the Un ion. "You would like to know," the com mission merchant wrote in answer to a query from the doubtful editor of an Eastern agricultural journal, "if the packing of the Hood River apples Is so perfect that we accept them with out close inveptigation. Not only do we accept them without close invest! gation, but we accept them without any invstigation whatever, leaving the en tire matter up to the Hood River Ap ple Growers' Union. . . .Our con tract is certainly a very stringent one, they guaranteeing us a perfect pack and also guaranteeing that every apple in every box is absolutely perfect. We have handled several hundred thous and boxes and never have we found ourselves In condition to make a single complaint against their pack. . . . This is more than we have been able to say for any other large pack of fruit that we have ever contracted for. Fruit can be had Just as good In the East as in the West, and we see no reason why the Eastern grower can't get just as much for his goods as the Western grower, if he will only make up his mind to one absolute fact and that is to be honest, and that if he thinks he can fool the people all the time by putting up a fake barrel of apples he is making a big mistake." SAMPLE POULTRY PROFITS Prof. W. M. Proctor, Superintendent of the Forest Grove public schools, on June 1 last purchased 12 hens and a rooster, at a cost of $6.50. During the past eight months he has expended f 14.05 for feed, making a total invest ment of $20.55. He has received for 77 dozen eggs $19.50, credits for broil ers, frys, etc., $6.40 and now has on hand 24 chickens, valued at $12.00. This shows a total of $37.90, and leaves a net profit of $17.35. Blacksmithing and Wagon Work Gasoline Power Sprayers Steam Power Sprayers Equipped to Repair all kinds of Sprayers Howell Bros. Two doors east of Fashion Stables lood River, Ore. Phone 227 -X Most time to plant gardens. I We are Prepared lor Winter With a Complete Stock of Hand Sleds Snow Shoes Norwegian Skiis and Skates 0 Call on us when In need of anything in the - . ; ; Hardware line. It will pay you as well as us I Blowers Hardware Co. I The firm that Butler Banking Co. Established Nineteen Hundred CapitalOne Hundred Thousand Dollars Safe Deposit Boxes Leslie Butler, President Truman Butler, FOR BABY'S COUGH Relief is quick when you use K.-C. Mentholated White Pine and Tar Other Cough Remedies are Camphorated Oil, Aro- i matic Cascara, Red Cross Cough Plasters, K.-C. Cold Tablets. Listerine, You Can Buy Safely We give, Keir & Reltable SMITH BLOCK I An Appeal to J Will prove that honest values are much J more satisfactory than exaggerated val- ue claims. You will be wise and do well to come here, where honest prices J are quoted and common sense price asked t l T. J. KINNAIRD l Cor. 2nd and Oak Sts. Phone 78 J T3 S. E. BARTMESS Funeral Director and Practical Embalmer KSTAHMSHEI) IK VKARS MOOD RIVER, OREOON HtHMMt "Makes Good" Savings Department Vice President C. H. Vaughan, Cashier Peroxide, Gargles, etc. Anything We Recommend rt GREEN TRADING STAMPS Cass "Druggists HOOD RIVER Common Sense j NEW MODEL OLIVER: The old reliable visible type- J writer with new printype and other improvements. The ma- chine that writes print that is J print and is always ready for business. For sale or rent on easy terms. A. V. ONTMANK, Agt. J 10" Oak St. Hood River, Ore. t t